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Christopher J. N. Lustgraaf

Researcher at University of Southern Mississippi

Publications -  12
Citations -  396

Christopher J. N. Lustgraaf is an academic researcher from University of Southern Mississippi. The author has contributed to research in topics: Human physical appearance & Face perception. The author has an hindex of 7, co-authored 12 publications receiving 311 citations.

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Many Labs 3: Evaluating participant pool quality across the academic semester via replication

Charles R. Ebersole, +63 more
TL;DR: This paper examined time of semester variation in 10 known effects, 10 individual differences, and 3 data quality indicators over the course of the academic semester in 20 participant pools and with an online sample.
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The Adaptive Utility of Deontology: Deontological Moral Decision-Making Fosters Perceptions of Trust and Likeability

TL;DR: For example, the authors found that women reported greater dislike for targets whose decisions were consistent with utilitarianism than men, and that women may be particularly sensitive to the implications of the various motives underlying moral decision-making.
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Social and emotional intelligence moderate the relationship between psychopathy traits and social perception

TL;DR: In this article, the authors explored how psychopathy relates to individuals' ability to discriminate trustworthy and untrustworthy faces and faces displaying Duchenne versus non-Duchenne smiles.
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Activation of self-protection threat increases women's preferences for dominance in male faces

TL;DR: This paper found that women's preference for dominance in men coincides with acutely activated self-protection threat, and also extends to dominance cues in faces, and that women exposed to a video which activated selfprotection concerns displayed a stronger preference for male faces communicating high dominance (versus high trust) compared to women in a control video condition.
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Women's Dangerous World Beliefs Predict More Accurate Discrimination of Affiliative Facial Cues

TL;DR: For example, this article found that women's beliefs about their vulnerability to aggression are associated with a stronger preference for physical formidability and aggressive dominance in male bodies and faces, and that women with higher dangerous world beliefs were more likely to detect real and fake smiles.